4.1 Article

Quantum pseudo-telepathy

Journal

FOUNDATIONS OF PHYSICS
Volume 35, Issue 11, Pages 1877-1907

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10701-005-7353-4

Keywords

entanglement; nonlocality; Bell's theorem; quantum information processing; quantum communication complexity; pseudo-telepathy

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Quantum information processing is at the crossroads of physics, mathematics and computer science. It is concerned with what we can and cannot do with quantum information that goes beyond the abilities of classical information processing devices. Communication complexity is an area of classical computer science that aims at quantifying the amount of communication necessary to solve distributed computational problems. Quantum communication complexity uses quantum mechanics to reduce the amount of communication that would be classically required. Pseudo-telepathy is a surprising application of quantum information processing to communication complexity. Thanks to entanglement, perhaps the most nonclassical manifestation of quantum mechanics, two or more quantum players can accomplish a distributed task with no need for communication whatsoever, which would be an impossible feat for classical players. After a detailed overview of the principle and purpose of pseudo-telepathy, we present a survey of recent and not-so-recent work on the subject. In particular, we describe and analyse all the pseudo-telepathy games currently known to the authors.

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